This may be common knowledge for others in this group but it was news
to me. I was in my local HD the other day and wandered down the aisle
with the hardwoods. I noticed their cull bin had a stack of red oak and
poplar cut offs stacked on the top. I looked to see if they had been
marked with the spray paint on the end as they do with their cull bin
items. They weren't marked. There were maybe eight to ten cut offs
between a foot to two feet in length. I found an employee and asked him
if they were going to go in the cull bin or back on the shelf. He said
they weren't going back on the shelf but that they weren't going in the
cull bin either. He said they would be thrown away but that I could buy
them at the regular linear foot price if I wanted them. He said they
couldn't put them in the cull bin because they are sold by the linear
foot. I can understand their position- if they put these cut offs in
the cull bin it might encourage people to saw off a foot or two and
then ask if they can have it at the cull price instead of full price.
OTOH I find it sad that this lumber is going to be thrown away. I could
use it for small boxes or drawer fronts, etc. In the past at this same
HD I have found a maple and a red oak cut off in the cull bin but
perhaps this was a mistake or they've changed their policy???
Dale
"Duane Bozarth" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> GregP wrote:
> >
> > On 15 Feb 2005 20:23:40 -0800, [email protected] wrote:
> >
> > >OTOH I find it sad that this lumber is going to be thrown away. I could
> > >use it for small boxes or drawer fronts, etc. In the past at this same
> > >HD I have found a maple and a red oak cut off in the cull bin but
> > >perhaps this was a mistake or they've changed their policy???
> >
> > Sounds like you might want to find out where they throw
> > them away :-)
>
> Can you say dumpster-dive?
In some states (like California) dumpster-diving is illegal. Reasons range
from
reducing employee theft to avoiding the possibility of faulty products
winding up
in consumer hands. One case that I remember was a number of bars of soap
retrieved from a dumpster (at a soap factory) that had been thrown out
because
they had metal shavings embedded in them...the person taking the soap
re-sold
it (not knowing the soap had a problem) and many people had a very
unpleasant
surprise.
GregP wrote:
>
> On 15 Feb 2005 20:23:40 -0800, [email protected] wrote:
>
> >OTOH I find it sad that this lumber is going to be thrown away. I could
> >use it for small boxes or drawer fronts, etc. In the past at this same
> >HD I have found a maple and a red oak cut off in the cull bin but
> >perhaps this was a mistake or they've changed their policy???
>
> Sounds like you might want to find out where they throw
> them away :-)
Can you say dumpster-dive?
"Duane Bozarth" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> GregP wrote:
>>
>> On 15 Feb 2005 20:23:40 -0800, [email protected] wrote:
>>
>> >OTOH I find it sad that this lumber is going to be thrown away. I could
>> >use it for small boxes or drawer fronts, etc. In the past at this same
>> >HD I have found a maple and a red oak cut off in the cull bin but
>> >perhaps this was a mistake or they've changed their policy???
>>
>> Sounds like you might want to find out where they throw
>> them away :-)
>
> Can you say dumpster-dive?
This was discussed in the past. I guess they take a lot pf precautions to
prevent that. It id also one of the favorite ways of employees to steal
merchandise by tossing it for later retrieval.
Our HD here in Minnesota still puts the cutoffs in the sale
bin. I check on Sundays anytime I'm in the area, as they end
up cutting a lot more hardwood on Saturdays. This week I got a
couple of 6" red oak boards (26-28" long) for $1.01, and a
week ago I got just under a half sheet of 3/4" oak plywood for
$2.01. That was an odd one-- the sheet was cut to about 46",
and they were selling 3x4' precut sheets for $18.99 a couple
of aisles over.
-Kiwanda
On 15 Feb 2005 20:23:40 -0800, [email protected] wrote:
>OTOH I find it sad that this lumber is going to be thrown away. I could
>use it for small boxes or drawer fronts, etc. In the past at this same
>HD I have found a maple and a red oak cut off in the cull bin but
>perhaps this was a mistake or they've changed their policy???
Sounds like you might want to find out where they throw
them away :-)
On Wed, 23 Feb 2005 16:32:43 GMT, "Edwin Pawlowski" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>
>This was discussed in the past. I guess they take a lot pf precautions to
>prevent that. It id also one of the favorite ways of employees to steal
>merchandise by tossing it for later retrieval.
>
... too bad...